2.1 Margat’s Inventory of Mega Aquifer Systems

In his world-wide inventory of large aquifer systems, Margat (2006; 2008) identified thirty-seven large aquifer systems and classified them as ‘les très grands systèmes aquifères du monde’ (the world’s very large aquifer systems). Later, Margat and Van der Gun (2013) introduced the term ‘mega aquifer systems’ for this category of very large aquifer systems. Figure 9 shows the location of these mega aquifer systems (projected on WHYMAP’s hydrogeological world map), while Table 4 lists their names and approximate size.

Map showing the world’s mega aquifer systems

Figure 9  The world’s mega aquifer systems (after Margat, 2008; WHYMAP, 2008). View a larger version of this figure.

Table 4  The Earth’s mega aquifer systems (after Margat and Van der Gun, 2013, modified).

# Aquifer System Area
(× 1 000 km2)
Maximum thickness (m) Countries involved
(ISO-3 alpha code)
AFRICA
1 Nubian Aquifer System (NAS)
(Nubian and Post-Nubian Systems)
2 199 3 500 EGY, LBY, SDN, TCD
2 North-Western Sahara Aquifer System 1 019 1 600 DZA, LBY, TUN
3 Murzuk-Djado Basin 450 2 500 DZA, LBY, NER
4 Taoudeni-Tanezrouft Basin 2 000 4 000 DZA, MRT, MLI
5 Senegalo-Mauritanian Basin 300 500 MRT, SEN, GMB, GNB
6 Iullemeden-Irhazer Aquifer System 635 1 500 NER, DZA, MLI, NGA
7 Lake Chad Basin 1 917 7 000 NER, NGA, TCD, CMR, CAF
8 Sudd Basin (Umm Ruwaba Aquifer) 365 3 000 SSD, SDN, ETH
9 Ogaden-Juba Basin ~1 000 12 000 ETH, SOM, KEN
10 Congo Basin ~1450 3 500 COG, COD, AGO, RAF, GAB
11 Cuvelai-Upper Zambezi Basin (Upper Kalahari) ~900 AGO, BWA, NAM, ZMB, ZWE
12 Stampriet-Kalahari Basin (Lower Kalahari) ~350 ZAF, BWA, NAM
13 Karoo Basin 600 7 000 ZAF
NORTH AMERICA
14 Northern Great Plains Aquifer System 770 2 000 CAN, USA
15 Cambrian-Ordovician Aquifer System 250 1 000 USA
16 California’s Central Valley Aquifer System 52 600 USA
17 High Plains Aquifer (Ogallala) 450 150 USA
18 Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Aquifer System 1 150 12 000 USA, MEX
SOUTH AMERICA
19 Amazon Basin 2000 7 000 BRA, COL, PER, BOL
20 Maranhão Basin (ParnaÍba Basin) 700 3 000 BRA
21 Guarani Basin (Paraná Basin) 1 195 800 BRA, ARG, PRY, URY
ASIA
22 Arabian Aquifer System > 1 485 6 500 SAU, JOR, KWT, BHR, QTR
23 Indus Basin ~ 320 300 PAK, IND
24 Ganges-Brahmaputra Basin ~ 600 600 IND, NPL, BGD
25 West Siberian Basin 3 200 6 000 RUS
26 Tunguss Basin 1 000 4 000 RUS
27 Angara-Lena Basin 600 3 000 RUS
28 Yakut Basin 720 1 200 RUS
29 Greater North China Plain Aquifer System (Huang Huai Hai Plain) 320 600 CHN
30 Song-Liao Plain (NE China Plain) 311 300 CHN
31 Tarim Basin 520 1 200 CHN
EUROPE
32 Paris Basin 190 3 200 FRA
33 Russian Platform Basins ~ 3 100 20 000 RUS, EST, LVA, LTU, BLR, UKR
34 North Caucasus Basin 230 10 000 RUS
35 Pechora Basin 350 3 000 RUS
AUSTRALIA
36 Great Artesian Basin 1 700 3 000 AUS
37 Canning Basin 430 1 000 AUS

The names of four of these systems require some clarification. First, in publications system number 1 is alternately called ‘Nubian Aquifer System’ and ‘Nubian Sandstones Aquifer System’, often indiscriminately. Here, the name ‘Nubian Aquifer System’ is used to indicate the total system extending northward to the Mediterranean Sea, including both the Nubian Sandstones and the Post-Nubian sediments which overly and confine the northward dipping Nubian Sandstones to the north of roughly 26°N. Second, system number 18, originally called the ‘Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains Aquifer System’, has been renamed to ‘Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Aquifer System’, to better represent all included aquifer units. Third, system number 21 is renamed here to ‘Guarani Basin’, because the name ‘Guarani Aquifer System’ – used by Margat and Van der Gun (2013) – refers in most publications only to the largely confined Guarani aquifer, without including other aquifers in the basin such as those present in the overlying Serra Geral Basalts and Bauru-Caiuá sediments. The Guaraní Basin is also known as Paraná Basin (Rebouças,1999; Feitosa et al, 2016). Fourth, publications alternately use the name ‘North China Plain’ to indicate either the Huang Huai Hai Plain (320,000 km2 in extent) or – in most cases – only the northern part of this area (Hai Plain, 136,000 km2). Therefore, the name ‘Greater North China Plain’ is used here to indicate mega aquifer system number 29, as an English equivalent of the name Huang Huai Hai Plain.

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Large Aquifer Systems Around the World Copyright © 2022 by Jac van der Gun. All Rights Reserved.